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Discover LudwigThe phrase "evocation by" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English
It is typically used to show that something is being evoked or called to mind by a particular person or thing. Example: The painting's use of vibrant colors and sweeping brushstrokes evoked strong emotions by the artist's skillful technique.
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Three Calder members participated in a superb rendition of "Rotae Passionis" (1983), a bracing evocation by nine instrumentalists of the betrayal, Crucifixion and entombment of Jesus.
In 1939, John Ford attempted a similar poetic evocation of the legendary American past in "Young Mr. Lincoln;" this kind of evocation, by getting at how we feel about the past, moves us far more than attempts at historical re-creation.
On this last subject, the writing ranges in style and quality from a madly overwritten piece of soft porn by the Egyptian writer Edwar al-Kharrat ("The boat that carried them together was shaking in its final shudder in the jungles"); to some subtle and beautiful seduction scenes; to a vivid evocation, by Alaa Al Aswany, of a woman's suffering when she allows her boss to molest her at work.
We previously demonstrated that human umbilical mesenchymal stem cells (HUMSCs) could be induced to differentiate into neuron-like cells (about 87%), express neurofilament and functional mRNAs responsible for the syntheses of subunits of the kainate receptor and glutamate decarboxylase, and generate an inward current in response to evocation by glutamate [9].
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Angela Merkel, now chancellor, was in Siberia late last month to meet Vladimir Putin and witness the signing of a deal that will allow BASF, a German company, to make a large investment in a Russian gas field.Many Poles and Balts find this Russo-German connection alarming hence the evocation last week by the Polish defence minister of the "the Molotov-Ribbentrop tradition".
The fallen chimney, crumbling walls, toppled Doric columns, headless caryatids, monoliths undermined and tumbled by burrowing worms, cows grazing and weeds growing in spaces where once-important people proclaimed the imperishability of their presumptions -- all these evidences of entropy versus architecture are potently evocative, and the evocations are by no means entirely negative.
Eve's effect on Hilliard is nicely rendered, not just by evocation of her physical beauty but by "some trick of her voice, or some indescribable movement of her head - the trifles which are all-powerful over a man in love".
And analysis is the evocation of insight by the hypothetical suggestions of thought, and the evocation of thought by the activities of direct insight.
The evocation of lipstick by both sides calls attention to the power of visual metaphor, which pictorially maps features of one thing onto something else.
The evocation of intuitions by philosophical thought experiments is important, not because they provide some special kind of a priori evidence, but simply because they need to be made explicit and assessed against the overall a posteriori evidence.
Other highlights included "Tre Laudi" (1937), an early, sublimely lyrical work by Dallapiccola, sung sweetly by Janna Baty, and "Le Temps et l'Ecume" (1989), a colorfully scored and almost Dali-like evocation of distorted time by the French composer Gerard Grisey, conducted by Mr. Benjamin, both on Friday afternoon.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com